Don’t think India’s musical heritage is dying: A R Rahman
Team Udayavani, Aug 4, 2018, 1:38 PM IST
Mumbai: Music maestro AR Rahman says India’s musical heritage may lack exposure but it is not dying as its roots are deep in tradition and people have a spiritual connection with it.
The double Oscar-winner has travelled across India to find rare instruments and hidden musical traditions in his maiden non-fiction series, “Harmony with A R Rahman”, being launched on Amazon Prime on August 15.
The quest underscored what Rahman always thought was true about India – every street has a musical legacy. Rahman will interpret these traditions in a modern context on the show.
“I was talking about this place in Kerala, Kalamandalam, where they have this guru-shishya thing and they have a place in Chennai which has a fees of Rs 370 per year and they teach folk music, classical music and dance. In Rajasthan, every kid sings amazingly well and also in Punjab,” Rahman told PTI in an interview.
The composer, who is credited with revolutionising Indian cinema music in his 25-year illustrious career, says traditional music may lack exposure but exists in a big way.
Rahman may be anchoring the show but jokes that people should not have high expectations about his skills as a host.
“I’m not like a traditional anchor. Don’t have high expectations. I am not like ‘Lovely! look at this place, look at the food’. I am not that charming. In my own ways, I had these beautiful interactions.”
In fact, Rahman, one of India’s most renowned musicians, says he fears the burden of expectation “always, every day”.
The series captures Rahman’s interactions with artists with an impromptu jam session towards the end of every episode. The last episode shows Rahman put together a composition with all artists.
On the internet, it is all about the number of views one has managed to garner, but Rahman says it is “gross” to judge something like that.
“(Though) It does influence what you are doing. We wanted this series to be intriguing, interesting and not boring as these are instruments that are off the radar and we are bringing them to the fore. There is purity, honesty, there is a legacy that we intend to bring,” he said.
The five-episode series is created by Kavithalayaa.
“Harmony with A.R. Rahman” features maestros such as Ustad Mohi Baha’un-din Dagar from Maharashtra, who comes from an eight generation-long lineage of musicians and plays the Rudra Veena in Dhrupad style, Kalamandalam Sajith Vijayan from Kerala who devoted a majority of his life to the Mizhavu, Lourembam Bedabati Devi of Manipur, a renowned artiste and guru of traditional Manipuri folk song, and Mickma Tshering Lepcha from Sikkim who is known to be a master of the Panthong Palith.
Udayavani is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel and stay updated with the latest news.
Top News
Related Articles More
Pushpa bows down to no one, but will do so for you: Allu Arjun to fans at ‘Pushpa 2’ trailer launch
Actress Kasthuri produced in court, lodged in jail
‘Kantara: Chapter 1’ to release on October 2, 2025
National award-winning child actor Master Rohit injured in road accident
Nayanthara slams Dhanush for sending Rs 10 crore lawsuit over her documentary: All-time low for you
MUST WATCH
Latest Additions
Mangaluru: Kerala-based agency allegedly defrauds over 130 job seekers
Bantwal: Teenager dies in lightning strike at Kedila
Ration cards will not be cancelled: Minister Muniyappa clarifies
Violence continues in Manipur; BJP and Congress offices vandalised
Delhi Air Pollution | No physical classes for students, barring class 10 and 12: CM Atishi
Thanks for visiting Udayavani
You seem to have an Ad Blocker on.
To continue reading, please turn it off or whitelist Udayavani.